From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
2010 United States Virgin Islands gubernatorial election
none
none
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| election_name | 2010 United States Virgin Islands gubernatorial election |
| country | United States Virgin Islands |
| type | presidential |
| ongoing | No |
| previous_election | 2006 United States Virgin Islands gubernatorial election |
| previous_year | 2006 |
| next_election | 2014 United States Virgin Islands gubernatorial election |
| next_year | 2014 |
| election_date | November 2, 2010 |
| turnout | 66.54% |
| image1 | File:Governor John de Jongh - United States Virgin Islands (cropped).jpg |
| image_size | 150x150px |
| nominee1 | **John de Jongh** |
| running_mate1 | **Gregory Francis** |
| party1 | Democratic Party (United States) |
| popular_vote1 | **18,645** |
| percentage1 | **56.76%** |
| image2 | File:Kenneth Ezra Mapp (cropped).png |
| nominee2 | Kenneth Mapp |
| running_mate2 | Malik Sekou |
| party2 | Independent |
| popular_vote2 | 14,167 |
| percentage2 | 43.13% |
| map_caption | Results by district |
| **de Jongh:** | |
| title | Governor |
| before_election | John de Jongh |
| before_party | Democratic Party (United States) |
| after_election | John de Jongh |
| after_party | Democratic Party (United States) |
de Jongh: The 2010 U.S. Virgin Islands gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 2010, and won by incumbent Democratic Governor John de Jongh. De Jongh was elected to his first term in 2006 with 57% of the vote over Kenneth Mapp.
Governor John de Jongh was elected to a second, full year-term, over independent Kenneth Mapp, in what was essentially a rematch of the 2006 gubernatorial runoff election.
Candidates
Democratic
- Governor: John de Jongh incumbent Governor (first elected in 2006)
- Lieutenant Governor: Gregory Francis, incumbent Lieutenant Governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands
Defeated in primary
- Adlah Donastorg Jr., seven-term U.S. Virgin Islands Senator (since January 1995); 2006 candidate for governor. Donastorg announced his candidacy on July 25, 2010.
- Samuel Baptiste, Donastorg's running mate Baptiste worked as an assistant commissioner of Property and Procurement under former Governor Roy Schneider. He was also a 2002 candidate for governor as a Republican.
- Gerard Luz James II, former Lieutenant Governor and president of the fifth Constitutional Convention
- Glen J. Smith, James' running mate, teacher and educator
- James O'Bryan Jr., two-term chairman of the Democratic Party of the Virgin Islands, former Senator, and Administrator of Saint Thomas and Water Island
- Pamela Richards Samuel, O'Bryan's running mate, former Commissioner of Tourism
Independent
- Kenneth Mapp, former Lieutenant Governor; gubernatorial candidate in 2006
- Dr. Malik Sekou, Mapp's running mate. Sekeu is a political science professor and department chair at the University of the Virgin Islands. He has written on history, social science and political science. He had previously been elected to the Virgin Islands Board of Education.
Independent Citizens Movement
Withdrew
- Terrence "Positive" Nelson, U.S. Virgin Islands Senator, member of the Independent Citizens Movement (ICM) party
Republican
- None
Democratic primaries
The gubernatorial primary was held on Saturday, September 11, 2010. The only contested primary was for the Democratic nomination.
In the four-way Democratic primary, incumbent Governor John de Jongh and Lieutenant Governor Gregory Francis won the nomination with 7,981 votes (53%). Senator Adlah Donastorg Jr., who ran against de Jongh in 2006, placed second with 4,526 votes. Former Lieutenant Governor Gerard Luz James came in third place in the primary with 1,936 votes, while James O'Bryan Jr. placed fourth with 465 votes.
Governor John de Jongh garnered more votes than all three of his Democratic challengers combined, In response to his 53% victory, de Jongh stated, "The combination of their votes by no means comes close to what we achieved this evening ... That feels very good." Second place candidate Senator Adlah Donastorg left the Virgin Islands Legislature when his term expired in January 2011, after seven terms in office. He told the Virgin Islands Daily News that he will return to the private sector after the election.
Former Lieutenant Governor Gerard Luz James, told the media he "accepted the people's decision," but also added in response to the election, "The people of the Virgin Islands showed me today that they really and truly endure mistreatment, endure corruption, endure mismanagement, and they also endure maltreatment to each other ... The only thing that I can see is continued destruction, and it's sad, sad, sad." James stated that he would not endorse Governor de Jongh for a second term stating, "Why should I endorse anyone when it shows me truly that the people don't want to have anything that is right?" James O'Bryan, who with running mate Pamela Richards Samuel received 432 votes, said, "The people have spoken, I respect their wishes, and I will go forward with this episode from now on." With the completion of the Democratic primary, Governor John de Jongh went on to face independent candidate Kenneth Mapp in the general election on November 2, 2010. de Jongh won the Election with 56.27% of the vote.
Results
General election
The gubernatorial general election was held on November 2, 2010, with incumbent Governor John de Jongh being challenged by independent Kenneth Mapp, a former Lieutenant Governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands, for a second consecutive executive election. De Jongh had narrowly defeated Mapp in the 2006 gubernatorial runoff election.
The incumbent gubernatorial team of Gov. John de Jongh and Lt. Governor Gregory Francis won re-election to a second term in office, garnering 17,535 votes. The independent ticket of Kenneth Mapp and Malik Sekou placed second in the election, earning 13,580 votes. Mapp initially refused to concede despite trailing by a wide margin, citing voting irregularities.
Ralph T. O'Neal, the Premier of the neighboring British Virgin Islands, called Governor de Jongh on November 4, 2010, to congratulate on his re-election.
Endorsements
- Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States
- Tony Coelho, former Democratic congressman from California.
- Luz Luis, former First Lady and wife of Governor Juan Francisco Luis
- Virgin Islands Source
- St. Croix Avis
Polling
| Poll source | Date(s) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| administered | Sample | ||||
| size | Margin | ||||
| of error | John | ||||
| de Jongh (D) | Kenneth | ||||
| Mapp (I) | |||||
| N/A | October 24, 2010 | - | - | **52%** | 25% |
Mock election results
| Poll source | Date(s) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| administered | Sample | ||||
| size | Margin | ||||
| of error | John | ||||
| de Jongh (D) | Kenneth | ||||
| Mapp (I) | |||||
| CAHS | October 2010 | - | - | **56%** | 44% |
Results
By district
| District | DeJongh | Mapp | Write-in | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| St. Croix | **8,975** | |||
| 7,615 | ||||
| 15 | 16,605 | |||
| St. Thomas/St. John | **9,670 | |||
| ** | 6,552 | |||
| 22 | ||||
| 16,244 |
By precinct
| Precinct | DeJongh | Mapp | Write-in | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Addelita Cancryn School | **564** | 410 | 3 | 977 | |
| Alexander Henderson School I | 477 | **506** | — | 983 | |
| Alexander Henderson School II | 452 | **508** | 1 | 961 | |
| Alfredo Andrews | **502** | 389 | — | 891 | |
| Bertha C. Boschulte Cafeteria | **536** | 417 | 3 | 956 | |
| CAHS Annex | **576** | 401 | — | 977 | |
| CAHS Cafeteria | **321** | 305 | 2 | 628 | |
| Charles Enamuel I | **374** | 360 | — | 734 | |
| Charles Enamuel II | 262 | **267** | — | 529 | |
| Claude O. Markoe | 317 | **357** | 3 | 677 | |
| Curriculum Center | **1,282** | 936 | 5 | 2,223 | |
| Dober School North | 235 | **254** | — | 489 | |
| Dober School South | **257** | 171 | 2 | 430 | |
| Elena Christian | **831** | 555 | 3 | 1,389 | |
| Eulalie Rivera School | **605** | 579 | — | 1,184 | |
| Evelyn Williams I | **408** | 368 | — | 776 | |
| Evelyn Williams II | **344** | 327 | — | 671 | |
| Florence Williams Library | **300** | 284 | — | 584 | |
| Gladys Abraham Cafeteria | **875** | 532 | 2 | 1,409 | |
| Guy Benjamin School | **141** | 80 | 1 | 222 | |
| Ivanna Eudora Kean Cafeteria | **409** | 240 | — | 649 | |
| John F. Kennedy | 263 | **305** | — | 568 | |
| Joseph Gomez Cafeteria | **772** | 689 | 5 | 1,466 | |
| Joseph Sibilly School A | **662** | 241 | — | 903 | |
| Joseph Sibilly School B | **425** | 131 | 2 | 558 | |
| Juanita Gardine I | **384** | 300 | 1 | 685 | |
| Juanita Gardine II | **404** | 291 | — | 695 | |
| Julius E. Sprauve Cafeteria | **410** | 402 | 3 | 815 | |
| Lew Muckle | 694 | **702** | 1 | 1,397 | |
| Oswald Harris Court | **220** | 190 | — | 410 | |
| Pearl B. Larsen | **941** | 377 | 3 | 1,321 | |
| Ricardo Richards I | **391** | 318 | 2 | 711 | |
| Ricardo Richards II | **364** | 318 | 2 | 684 | |
| St. Gerards Hall | 193 | **201** | — | 394 | |
| Ulla F. Muller Cafeteria | **569** | 363 | 2 | 934 | |
| Ulla F. Muller (Rm18) | **289** | 189 | — | 478 | |
| Winston Raymo North | **231** | 154 | — | 385 | |
| Winston Raymo South | **255** | 163 | 1 | 419 |
References
References
- Mann, Susan. (2006-11-22). "DeJongh wins USVI gubernatorial runoff election". [[Caribbean New News]].
- Simescu, Christian. (2010-07-26). "Donastorg seeks Democratic line for governor". [[Virgin Islands Daily News]].
- Bauer, John. (2010-08-01). "James Joins Governor's Race". [[St. Croix Source]].
- "O'Bryan/Richards-Samuel Host Unconventional Kickoff To Gubernatorial Campaign {{!}} Crucians In Focus".
- Kossler, Bill. (2010-07-26). "Gubernatorial Challengers Pick Running Mates". [[St. Croix Source]].
- Pancham, Ananta. (2010-09-12). "DeJongh-Francis Clinch Top Spots in Democratic Primary". [[St. John Source]].
- Lewin, Aldeth. (2010-09-13). "DeJongh-Francis victory leaves rivals with uncertain futures". [[Virgin Islands Daily News]].
- "2010 Primary Election". Election System of the Virgin Islands.
- "PRIMARY ELECTION CERTIFICATION - ST. THOMAS-ST. JOHN DISTRICT".
- Pancham, Ananta. (2010-10-02). "DeJongh-Francis to Return for Second Term". [[St. Thomas Source]].
- Kossler, Bill. (2010-10-05). "BVI's O'Neal Congratulates DeJongh as Mapp Won't Fold". [[St. Thomas Source]].
- (October 30, 2020). "President Obama Endorses Gov. John deJongh".
- (November 1, 2010). "Gov. John de Jongh Deserves Second Term".
- "2010 General Election". Election System of the Virgin Islands.
- "GENERAL ELECTION CERTIFICATION-DISTRICT OF ST. CROIX".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 2010 United States Virgin Islands gubernatorial election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report